The one thing a preacher can never know about a sermon is how God will use it. Every good preacher wants to preach under the influence of divine inspiration every Sunday. As one who preached for 43 year, I know that such was my hope, but there were those times when the sermon was preached in response to the pressure of Sunday coming instead of holy inspiration. Some seem so mundane and ordinary and filled more with duty than inspiration. The amazing thing is that God can use even these to speak to the seeking heart of someone who has drawn aside hoping to hear the Word of God.
Many have been the times when someone would tell me how God spoke a Word to them from a sermon I preached without any expectation that such a Word would be heard from the message. In these retirement years filled with listening to other preachers, I have experienced this holy work from the other side of the altar. Just this morning a sentence preached in the middle of a sermon about Thomas washed over a deep place in my spirit in a way which was not likely intended by the preacher, but I am sure was planned by God. One of the exciting things about preaching is what God chooses to do with it! I am grateful for the good preachers I am privileged to hear in this season of my life.
When I first retired sixteen years ago, I was convinced there were no good preachers anymore. Either the preaching has gotten better, or God has worked on my cynical heart because preaching is heard so differently now. I was always grateful for the opportunity to preach the Word of God Sunday after Sunday. Why He called me to such a task is something I have often pondered. I am grateful, too, for the younger men and women who are taking seriously the work of preaching in these days. One of the things we can all do to help our preachers is to pray for them as they carry forward this important ministry of the church.
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